All Americans should take a lesson from Jaiden, a 12-year-old seventh grade student at The Vanguard Secondary School in Colorado Springs, Colorado. Jaiden chose to wear patch on his backpack and was kicked off campus when he refused to remove the patch.
Jaiden’s
patch is known as the Gadsden Flag. It features a rattlesnake and the words “Don’t
Tread on Me.” An unnamed administrator took issue with the patch because he/she
thought that the Gadsden Flag was associated with “slavery” and “the slave
trade.” The administrator told Jaiden’s parents that “we can’t have that [flag]
around other kids.”
Even
though Jaiden’s parents corrected the administrator about the meaning of the
Gadsden flag, the administrator was not persuaded. In fact, the executive
director of the school told the parents in an email that the Gadsden flag is an
“unacceptable symbol,” tied to “white-supremacy groups, and may “refer to drugs,
tobacco, alcohol, or weapons.”
The problem arose because neither the school administrator nor the executive director known the history of the Gadsden flag. Britannica.com published the following about the Gadsden flag.
Gadsden flag, also called Hopkins flag or
Don’t Tread on Me flag, historical flag used by Commodore Esek Hopkins, the
United States’ first naval commander in chief, as his personal ensign during
the American Revolution (1775-83). The flag features a coiled rattlesnake above
the words “Don’t Tread on Me” on a yellow background.
The flag was one of several contemporary
flags that included an image of a rattlesnake, which had become a popular
symbol of unity among the American colonies. The rattlesnake symbol originated
in the 1754 political cartoon “Join, or Die” published in Benjamin Franklin’s Pennsylvania
Gazette. The cartoon, which depicted the colonies divided as segments of a
cut-up snake, exhorted the colonists to unite in the face of the French and
Indian War (1754-63). The symbol was later used to represent unity during the
Revolutionary War. One observer, writing to the Pennsylvania Journal in
December 1775, claimed that a drum of the newly created Marine Corps displayed
a rattlesnake alongside the motto “Don’t tread on me!”
That same month, Esek Hopkings was
appointed commodore of the Continental Congress’s naval forces, and his ship, USS
Alfred, hoisted a flag that combined the
Rattlesnake and the “Don’t Tread on Me”
motto. The “elegant standard” was presented in February 1776 to the Provincial
Congress of South Carolina by Christopher Gadsden, a delegate to the
Continental Congress who was that same month placed in command of South Carolina’s
military forces. The president of the Provincial Congress of South Carolina
subsequently ordered the flag to be displayed in its hall. The design received
little mention, however, after the United States achieved independence and
adopted the Stars and Strips as the official national flag in 1777 (see flag of
the United States of America).
At the beginning of the 21st
century, the Gadsden flag resurfaced in popular culture. It took on libertarian
undertones, but it was not initially attached to any particular ideology.
Rather, it was used to represent a broad American ethos, including by Nike and
Major League Soccer in 2006. But after the conservative Tea Party movement
emerged in 2009, the flag became increasingly associated with the movement’s
right-wing populism.
With Tea Party rallies taking place during
the presidency of Barack Obama, the first Black president of the United States,
rhetoric at some rallies occasionally took on racial undertones; by
association, the Gadsden flag was thereby tainted with racism in the eyes of
some observers. In 2014 an African American mechanic for the U.S. Postal
Service filed a complaint with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission
(EEOC) over a coworker wearing a hat with the flag’s design. The EEOC
determined in 2016 that the design, although not a racist symbol, is “sometimes
interpreted to convey racially-tinged messages in some contexts,” and that
the complaint against its use met the standard for investigation according to
Title VII of the Civil Rights Act. [Emphasis added.]
I
have been writing this blog since September 2009 and have known about the
Gadsden flag from the beginning of its resurfacing. Today, while composing this
post, is the first time that I have ever heard or read anything about the flag
being racially tinged. From my understanding, the flag was used in defiance of
the dictatorial methods being used by the Obama administration – the same
reason that I began writing this blog. In fact, I own my own Gadsden flag.
Neither
I nor the Tea Party cared about the color of Obama’s skin, but we were
concerned about the government doing things that it should not be doing – like taking
over automobile companies and giving the stock to the employees. For those who
are not aware, the Biden administration is simply the third Obama term because
Biden is building on everything that the Obama administration did to destroy
America. The Gadsden flag represents defiance against a government that destroys
freedoms – exactly the type of government provided by the Biden administration.
This is one of the reasons why millions of Americans support Donald Trump.
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